Natural Leaky Gut Cure Boosts Overall Health and Wellbeing

Digestive diseases are just as common as headaches in the United States and are often mistreated, misdiagnosed or even worse completely ignored. The Leaky Gut Syndrome is one of the most puzzling, since the underlying factors are sort of a mystery for today’s medicine.

For many, the Leaky Gut Syndrome is not something familiar, although they might have had it for a long time now. Symptoms include bloating, cramps and gas, aches and pains as well as food sensitivities and the worst part is that even for physicians the Leaky Gut Syndrome is sort of a grey area.

They don’t teach that in medical school and to actually set this diagnosis it takes the mind of an introspective and all-knowledgeable Dr. House since symptoms can easily be confused as signs of some other condition. Even the Leaky Gut Syndrome diagnosis in itself is sort of a pending status for a diagnosis to come.

“You hope that your doctor is a good-enough Sherlock Holmes, but sometimes it is very hard to make a diagnosis” explained gastroenterologist Donald Kirby, MD and director of the Cleveland Clinic Center for Human Nutrition in an interview for WebMD.

In a nutshell, Leaky Gut Syndrome is a puzzling condition. Physicians know for sure it actually exists but the causes or therapies are far from being exact. Oftentimes, the same people troubled by celiac and Chron’s disease will experience Leaky Gut Syndrome symptoms, but nobody knows exactly why.

Conventional treatments for the leaky gut symptoms include the intake of anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidative drugs as well as switching to gluten-free and casein-free diets, antifungal and low sugar diets. The intake of prebiotics and probiotics is also commonly prescribed, as well as nystatin supplements.

However, since there are not enough physicians that take the time and make the effort to actually diagnose their patients, many are left untreated and confused. Many more will be dissatisfied with the results of the treatment their physician has prescribed and so will turn to alternative medicine.

The online offer is boasting with various natural, holistic and herbal therapies for the Leaky Gut Syndrome, each taking a different approach to the same result: effective and permanent curing of the condition. This is also the case of Karen Brimeyer’s healing therapy for Leaky Gut Syndrome.

Karen Brimeyer believes the Leaky Gut Syndrome is an obvious sign the patient has poor gut health. She explains that seeing as the gut is responsible with a variety of essential substances for your overall health and wellbeing, the best way to heal it is detox.

The gut not only secrets serotonin, the substance that averts depression, but it is also responsible for the proper digestion and absorption of nutrients that give your body the energy needed to move, grow and repair itself. The gut is actually the sort of groundskeeper of your immune system, as 80% of the immune system is based off the Immunoglobulin A (IgA), produced and secreted in the digestive tract.

Consumer reviews have five-star ratings for Karen Brimeyer’s Natural Leaky Gut Syndrome Report. Josephine Cabrall writes: ”After following the program for 2 months, I now am enjoying eating again and all symptoms have lessened dramatically. My energy levels are higher, I feel much more relaxed and mentally alert”. All consumers say the program made the rakshes around their eyes and palms disappear and can now go to sleep without taking meds.

This free treatment for Leaky Gut Syndrome works by empowering you with knowledge about the food you eat that’s aggravating symptoms as well as by revealing tricks to ease the chronic symptoms. There are detox methods that help clean the body, recipes simple and delicious designed to appease and nourish your gut without creating secondary problems.

Comments

Sometimes waiting for natural way of cure is too long to wait. When your are in deparation you can do pretty much anything you find nearest. Thanks for the nice article.

C. E. ClowardAug 30, 2014 6:57pm

If you have a permanent condition that contributes to leaky gut, you must constantly adjust your behavior to deal with that condition to minimize the effect on your leaky gut.

If this helps anyone, I have done a lot of research about appendectomy and possible subsequent "backwash ileitis", which is inflammation of the ileum due to acidic bowel contents running back into the ileum from the ascending colon due to "open ileocecal valve".

This can damage the ileum, and cause it to become thinner and leaky.

It is necessary to learn how to live with this condition and control your eating choices and your behavior to keep it from flaring up.

Certain chiropractors have information about open or closed ileocecal valve. There are pamphlets available, and information online.

It is possible to have this even if you still have your appendix, but having the appendix removed seems to increase the likelihood of this backwash effect.

I learned this from a chiropractor-naturopath who made this observation after 30 years of practice, noticing the increased occurance in people who had their appendix removed.

It also depends on the type of incision made for the appendectomy. It is less symptomatic when done with laparoscopy--a tiny incision.

It is more symptomatic when done with a "bikini cut" across the bottom of the pelvic area, or other types of large abdomen incisions where more nerves are cut. This has been my observation.

The roughest fibers like coconut and nuts and the tiny seeds of a strawberry, for example, will irritate the ileum, ileocecal valve and the appendectomy scar, and you will get locked up in that area and a lot of referred neurological symptoms result, even down your right leg, and shoulder pain.

Chronic stasis of the stool in the ileum will degrade or burn it. So you get a leaky ileum. This can cause fluid retention in your right leg and knee.

I intend to write a blog on how I have learned to deal with this over 35 years, to avoid further colon surgery and retain normal bowel movement, and fairly normalize my life, so it may be done in a couple of months and on Google.

john wainwightMay 22, 2015 11:03am

I had an appendectomy when I was 19 (1966). Incidently, the wound became infected in hospital and I ran a fever. The stitches didn't hold and the wound was open for quite some time. However, getting to the point, I noticed, thereafter that my tongue developed an unpleasant and unsightly white growth, which has remained ever since. In recent times. At the age of 35 I developed asthma which, I might was the age I got married!
I have, more recently, begun to wonder whether or not this might be attributable to the loss of my appendix, and read somewhere that despite the commonly held believe that it doesn't perform any useful function, it was suggested that it provided a back-up for intestinal floral.
'Ah?' I'm now thinking.
Having recently (May 2015) read the transcript of a Dr Natasha Campbell-McBride's YouTube on Dr Mercola's site, I am fast becoming a devotee of kefir and other fermented foods.
My wife also had her appendix removed at the age of 12, and suffers rheumatoid arthritis, diverticular and a plethora of other miserable symptoms. I am convinced that our health will, eventually, be transformed. Thanks for your article. John

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